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  • Bird Fest presentation highlights plastic peril posed to birds

    Dan Rudy|May 7, 2015

    At last weekend's Stikine River Birding Festival, residents and visitors flocked to the Nolan Center to learn more about their feathery, flighty neighbors. While there were birding tips, arts shows and craft displays to enjoy, the festival also took on a more serious note regarding threats to the future of species' populations. Of particular concern for marine species are the short term and cumulative effects of discarded plastics. On Friday evening, University of Alaska Anchorage (UAA)...

  • Local trooper position may be saved

    Dan Rudy|May 7, 2015

    The community of Wrangell will be one step closer to having an Alaska Wildlife Trooper (AWT) again, following news that the Department of Public Safety (DPS) has reversed its January decision to cut the position. Citing budgetary constraints, the position was to be cut along with around 60 others across the state. “My understanding is the position itself is not going to be removed, but it’s going to be a vacant position,” explained Tim Despain, public information supervisor for DPS. “It could be some time before the actual position is filled....

  • Local kids given a 'Head Start'; program graduates 11 students

    Dan Rudy|May 7, 2015

    This year's Head Start class graduated another set of students on Tuesday, the latest batch since Wrangell's program began in 1985. The program finished with 19 students this year. Five days a week, they spent mornings preparing for grade school from September until May. "We have 11 graduating, and the rest are coming back to Head Start," explained Sandy Churchill, Wrangell's program director. Federally funded through Central Council Tlingit Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska (CCTHITA), the program...

  • Upcoming meetings to examine assessments, budget

    Dan Rudy|May 7, 2015

    As budget deadlines draw ever closer, a pair of meetings will be held at City Hall next week. The Board of Equalization meets Monday at 6:30 p.m., and the Wrangell Assembly will hold a public hearing on the Fiscal Year 2016 budget at 6 p.m. on Tuesday. Comprised of members of the Assembly, the Board of Equalization meets every year in early May. Forty-eight appeals have been filed this year, after assessors found improvement values had risen by five percent. While property values remained largely unchanged, this increase still affects overall...

  • Legislature on recess as committees mull budget

    Dan Rudy|May 7, 2015

    As the rest of the Alaska Legislature takes a two-week recess before returning for special session next Tuesday, the Senate and House finance committees have been left behind to continue working toward adoption of a budget. After extending beyond the statutory 90-day session without a fully funded budget, the Legislature was called into special session by Gov. Bill Walker. On April 30 both chambers agreed to gavel out until May 12 while the finance committees continue to meet. “Right now we’re recessing,” Rep. Dan Ortiz (I, Ketchikan) said...

  • Huge portion cut out of school lunch program

    Dan Rudy|Apr 30, 2015

    Extra chairs were needed at Monday's Wrangell School Board meeting as parents and staff settled in to what would be a lengthy proceeding. On the minds of many was the proposed cut of $113,000 from the school lunch budget, effectively ending the program. The cut represented the largest of several cuts to school expenditures planned for the coming year, totaling $209,167 or a 3.5 percent reduction. The cuts were in response to the loss of one-time funding from the state and reductions to per-pupil funding proposed by the House and Senate...

  • Assembly previews budget draft, weighs land and timber sales

    Dan Rudy|Apr 30, 2015

    As the Legislature was being summoned for special session, Wrangell's Borough Assembly continued to look at its own budget for the coming fiscal year at its Tuesday evening meeting. The regular meeting was preceded by a workshop on the FY16 budget. The budget Borough Manager Jeff Jabusch presented was balanced using the existing mil tax rate, with services maintained at much the same levels as at present. Some cuts include smaller items like travel expenses, supplies and subscriptions, and a reduction in contributions to radio station KSTK and...

  • Wrangell residents give input on State forest plan

    Dan Rudy|Apr 30, 2015

    Wrangell residents were able to lend some input to the Alaska Division of Foresty (ADF) April 22, during the third of five hearings the agency is holding in Southeast regarding its upcoming Southeast State Forest Management Plan. A presentation of the draft plan was delivered at City Hall by ADF forest planner Jim Schwarber and Clarence Clark, the division's timber sales manager for Southeast Alaska, giving community members the opportunity to review the plan before its adoption. Testimony is also being accepted at this time. Particularly, the...

  • Salard faces third pornography charge

    Dan Rudy|Apr 30, 2015

    An additional charge has been filed against former Wrangell physician Greg Salard, who currently is currently awaiting trial in Juneau on charges of possessing and distributing child pornography. On April 21, federal prosecutors filed an additional charge for receipt of the material, which could add five years to Salard's prison time if convicted. Salard was arrested at his Wrangell home last October following a five-month online investigation by the FBI. Prosecutors allegedly found 104 files containing child pornography on a computer in the...

  • Band earns three superior ratings at Music Fest

    Dan Rudy|Apr 30, 2015

    Parents and other supporters of the arts came to the high school commons on April 23 to give Wrangell High School's music students the chance to reprise their award-winning performance in Juneau earlier in the week. The band earned three "superior" ratings from adjudicators at this year's Southeast Music Fest, a competition involving the bands and choirs from schools around the region. "This is the first time in the seven years I've been here that the band earned the score of three superiors,"...

  • Local sales on the ups

    Dan Rudy|Apr 30, 2015

    Before the advent of the King Salmon Derby and summer vacation season, Wrangell residents are invited to enjoy the first of two annual Tax-free Days on Saturday. “Twice a year we petition the city to have no sales tax,” explained Cyni Waddington, with the Wrangell Chamber of Commerce. The days give consumers a temporary reprieve from the borough's seven-percent sales tax, and area businesses often use the day to offer special discounts and case lot sales. The last day was held in October to coincide with Permanent Fund Dividend disbursements, w...

  • Baseball and softball seasons cancelled due to lack of players

    Dan Rudy|Apr 30, 2015

    The dugouts will remain empty this spring for Wrangell High School, with both the baseball and softball seasons cancelled due to a lack of participation. “We gave it a good run but we called it quits,” explained school activities director Jack Carney. Sign-ups for boys baseball and girls softball began last month, and the period had been extended by two weeks in an effort to get more students to join. “The coaches worked hard to garner interest,” Carney commented. “It's kind of a bummer.” The softball team was not able to fill a roster, nee...

  • New book thaws out Wrangell cold case

    Dan Rudy|Apr 30, 2015

    A new book seeks to unearth the facts surrounding an erstwhile murky and long unsolved murder that took place near Wrangell more than 173 years ago. Published by Goose Lane Editions, Debra Komar's “The Bastard of Fort Stikine” is a biohistorical investigation of the 1842 shooting of John McLoughlin Jr., chief trader for the Hudson Bay Company at Fort Stikine. “The killing of chief trader John McLoughlin Jr. remains one of Canada's most enduring mysteries,” Komar writes in the book's preface. “The case never saw the inside of a courtroom...

  • WCA holding biannual meeting to talk mines and development

    Dan Rudy|Apr 23, 2015

    With a new Tribal Council and new items on the agenda for the year, Wrangell Cooperative Association (WCA) is inviting its members to bring their appetites and ideas Saturday to the biannual Meeting of the Association, from noon to 3 p.m. “We want to make it a fun event, for everyone to come down and visit,” explained Aaron Angerman, WCA’s new tribal administrator. The format will be kept informal, with a potluck dinner and different booths set up to inform and take feedback from members on different issues. The event will also provide an op...

  • Public meetings on new hospital successful; WMC finances stable

    Dan Rudy|Apr 23, 2015

    At its monthly board of trustees meeting April 15 Wrangell Medical Center, CEO Marla Sanger revisited public discussions about the future of healthcare services held earlier this month. Some 30 residents attended the discussion, facilitated by Anchorage consultancy Foraker Group at the Nolan Center April 2. “It was worth attending. I learned lots,” said board treasurer Barb Conine. “The people that came were really curious,” Sanger commented. WMC has applied for Foraker’s assistance with predevelopment work for building a new hospital,...

  • Secondary schools principal resigning

    Dan Rudy|Apr 23, 2015

    Wrangell High School and Stikine Middle School principal Colter Barnes announced last week that he will not be returning to the position in the fall. In a letter attached to the daily high school bulletin last Friday, Barnes announced his resignation, effective June 19. In the letter he thanked the community's students and parents for their support and hard work. “I want to thank each and every one of you for all your patience, support, feedback and for entrusting me with your children for this past year,” the letter read. Barnes was hired Aug...

  • Public schools strategic plan developing

    Dan Rudy|Apr 23, 2015

    A draft copy of the strategic plan being developed for Wrangell Public Schools (WPS) is taking shape. The plan is based on ideas from educators, parents, students and other community members discussed in a planning session in February. The strategic plan looks ahead for the next three academic years and focuses on the areas of academic achievement, career and technical education, technology, and safety and facilities. School administrators are still taking feedback from members of the four 6-person committees but will approach the Wrangell...

  • A festival for the birds

    Dan Rudy|Apr 23, 2015

    You’ve heard them building nests in the trees, and now you’re invited to come watch at Wrangell’s 18th Annual Stikine River Birding Festival, from April 30 through May 3. Activities for birders and non-birders alike are offered during the yearly celebration, which will include speakers, photo and art competitions, crafts, family activities, hummingbird banding and, of course, bird watching. The Stikine River area sees over 120 species of birds during migratory time periods, and shorebirds stop on the river during the year by the milli...

  • City Market expands services, facilities

    Dan Rudy|Apr 23, 2015

    Regular shoppers at City Market will have noticed some recent changes, such as the new display shelving for the store’s produce department. Implemented over Presidents Day weekend in February, store owner Benn Curtis explained that the change is part of a wider update to space management. In the case of the produce department, an additional 15 linear feet of shelving were added. Meanwhile, the beverage cases in aisle one have been consolidated and moved to the other side of the store, replaced by a new cooler for dairy and dressings. Curtis e...

  • Silvernail reroute passes P&Z

    Dan Rudy|Apr 16, 2015

    The future of Silvernail Work Road continues to take shape, with a debated section to be rerouted and downgraded from a right-of-way to an easement. At its regular meeting April 9, Wrangell’s Planning and Zoning Commission agreed to vacate the road where it cuts through the Marine Service Center yard. The section of Silvernail connecting Brueger Street with Front Street was largely conceptual, planned as a bypass for barge traffic making its way to Zimovia Highway. Although the boatyard was built afterward, the road’s right-of-way status was...

  • Firearms ordinances pass, tidelands sale to Stikine Inn proceeds

    Dan Rudy|Apr 16, 2015

    At its regular Tuesday-night meeting, Wrangell's City and Borough Assembly passed an amended ordinance proposal, creating a chapter on abuse of the 911 emergency system and amending chapters 10.32 and 10.36 of the Municipal Code regarding the carrying of concealed firearms in town. First reviewing the proposal in January, objections were raised by various Assembly members and residents about some preexisting language in the ordinance, such as where firearms could be fired in relation to the borough limits and near roadways. Subsequent meetings...

  • Celebrating the region's arts in Wrangell

    Dan Rudy|Apr 16, 2015

    Last week's Southeast Alaska Regional Artfest went as prettily as a picture, by all counts. Sixty students and 15 teachers from high schools in Juneau, Klawock, Skagway, Petersburg, Craig, Sitka and Mount Edgecumbe made their way to Wrangell to participate in the four-day event, from April 8 to 11. Fifteen different classes were offered at various locations in town. These were taught by a combination of visiting and local artists, and students were immersed in sometimes brand new mediums of...

  • Local archers take aim at national competition

    Dan Rudy|Apr 16, 2015

    Four students from Stikine Middle School and Wrangell High School participating in the National Archery in the Schools Program (NASP) have qualified to take aim in the national-level competition in Kentucky next month. Competing in the Alaska NASP Virtual Tournament on March 24 from a range set up inside the Evergreen Elementary School gym, Trevor Miller, Cody Thomassen, Sean Rooney and Garrett Miller all placed highly at the state level. Trevor Miller took first place in the state for the...

  • ADFG researchers flash 'bat signal' over Wrangell

    Dan Rudy|Apr 16, 2015

    Residents have been invited to become “citizen scientists” this summer, tracking bats and collecting data for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADFG). A good-sized group of Wrangellites flocked to the Forest Service’s final chautauqua for the season, where ADFG wildlife biologist Michael Kohan delivered an introductory presentation on our winged mammalian friends. She is one of two researchers for the program in Southeast, which began in 2011. Several approaches are used to track local bats, gathering data on population as well as new i...

  • Rape charges leveled against Salard, extradition pursued

    Dan Rudy|Apr 16, 2015

    Former Wrangell physician Greg Salard was arraigned last week at Alaska First District Court in Juneau on the charge of being a fugitive from justice. On March 25 a warrant from the state of Louisiana was issued for Salard’s arrest relating to a count of aggravated rape that is alleged to have taken place the previous decade. Salard was already incarcerated at the time, having been arrested at his Wrangell home last October for two felony charges regarding the possession and distribution of child pornography, following a five-month i...

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